1 4 0 • s m i t h s o n i a n c o n t r i b u t i o n s t o h i s t o ry a n d t e c h n o l o g yNotes1. <strong>The</strong> Identifier for Carriers, Locals, Fakes, Forgeries andBogus Posts of the United States, Larry Lyons, 1998.2. <strong>The</strong> City Despatch Post 1842–1852 Issues: A Study ofAmerica’s First and Most Versatile Stamp- Producing Plate,Scott R. Trepel, Siegel Auction Galleries, Inc. 2003.3. USA1, Robson Lowe, March 15, 1972, Lot 1011.4. Richard C. Frajola, Inc. Sale No. 4. (Middendorf), May1990, Lot 215.5. Siegel Auctions Galleries, Golden sale, November 15–17,1999, Lot 315.BibliographyLyons, Larry. <strong>The</strong> Identifier for Carriers, Locals, Fakes, Forgeries& Bogus Posts of the United States: A Study of the Identificationof the Local Stamp Adhesive from the Forgeries andBogus Posts. Westport, Ct.: Self published, 1998Trepel, Scott R. <strong>The</strong> City Despatch Post 1842–1852 Issues:A Study of America’s First and Most Versatile Stamp-Producing Plate. New York: Robert A. Siegel Auction Galleries,2003.
<strong>The</strong> U.S. 1847 Issue:Stamps That Changed the SystemHarvey MirskyIntroduction—<strong>The</strong> Problem Was DeficitsBy the 1840s, the U.S. <strong>Postal</strong> Service was incurring annual deficits of suchmagnitude they threatened the very viability of the system itself. 1<strong>The</strong>re were several causes behind these deficits:1. a complex system of postage rates that was not only expensive to administer,but which actually discouraged use of the mails by average citizens;2. abuse of the “free franking” privilege by congressmen, local postmasters, andvarious other government employees; 23. serious competition from independent posts that could deliver mail fasterand more cheaply than the <strong>Postal</strong> Service; and4. the practice of accepting letters whose postage was to be paid by the recipient.Often, these letters were carried hundreds, and even thousands of milesby the <strong>Postal</strong> Service, and then were simply refused by the addressee and returnedto Washington as “undeliverable.” Indeed, in his first annual “Reportto the President” (1845) Cave Johnson (Postmaster General, 1845–1848)noted the “immense number” of letters sent collect but not paid for by theaddressee (which he estimated at 300,000 pieces quarterly). 3Still discussing “dead letters,” Johnson noted that, “the department receivesno compensation for their transmission, and is at the additional expense of forwardingthem through the mails to the dead letter office.” He went on to notethat, “the service is performed in the transmission, and should be paid for at thetime, and by the person seeking the aid of the department.” 4<strong>The</strong>se were real problems and, clearly, reform was needed—desperatelyneeded. Reform came, beginning with the <strong>Postal</strong> Act of 1845. This Act of Congressdramatically lowered postage rates and established a consistent, weightbasedsystem that was easy to understand and administer (five cents per halfounce for letters traveling up to 300 miles, and ten cents per half ounce forletters traveling beyond 300 miles—that was it). <strong>The</strong> Act also restricted the freefranking privilege and it outlawed “private express companies,” which effectivelyeliminated competition from independent, inter- city mail companies.